
When Fox revived “The X-Files” in 2016, Morgan was one of only four writer/directors who returned, along with showrunner Chris Carter and longtime contributors Glen Morgan (Darin’s brother) and James Wong. “Mulder & Scully Meet the Were-Monster” - Season 10, Episode 3 - February 1, 2016 SEE ‘The X-Files’: Eugene Victor Tooms squeezes past Flukeman and Mrs. The foul-mouthed Detective Manners stole the show for his never-ending “bleeped” language. The episode played with the “unreliable narrator” structure, as we saw multiple versions of the same scenes from different points of view. Charles Nelson Reilly played Jose Chung, an author who was trying to get to the bottom of a possible UFO encounter in Klass County, Washington.
#X files home full episode free series#
Morgan’s final episode of the original series was an instant classic. “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space” - Season 3, Episode 20 - April 12, 1996 But after Mulder kept mentioning a research doctor named Bambi, Scully got jealous so she joined Mulder at the scene. Scully, meanwhile, was relegated to a comedic subplot in which she stayed at home and relaxed, occassionally helping Mulder solve the case via telephone. Otherwise known as the cockroach episode, “War of the Coprophages” was inspired by “The War of the Worlds” and featured Mulder trying to investigate why people were being killed in a small town.

“War of the Coprophages” - Season 3, Episode 12 - January 5, 1996 SEE ‘The X-Files’ wanted Robert Patrick back as John Doggett for Season 11, but ‘scheduling issue’ got in the way Boyle was awarded the Emmy for Best Drama Guest Actor for playing Clyde Bruckman. While Fox Mulder ( David Duchovny) was told he would die of autoerotic asphyxiation, Bruckman hinted that Dana Scully ( Gillian Anderson) would never die, which created countless fan theories that Scully was actually immortal. Morgan won his Emmy for writing this episode that guest-starred Peter Boyle in the title role as a man who could foresee how people were about to die. “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose” - Season 3, Episode 4 - October 13, 1995 The ultimate villain of “Humbug” turned out to be Leonard, an underdeveloped human fetus that detached himself from his conjoined twin Lanny in order to commit murders. Set in the world of a traveling carnival, “Humbug” was Morgan’s first solo script after previously receiving a “story by” credit for Season 2’s “Blood.” This was the first comedic episode of “The X-Files,” which proved that a show that billed itself as sci-fi could still have fun experimenting with different genres.

“Humbug” - Season 2, Episode 20 - March 31, 1995
